
water utilities and agencies over PFAS pollution that will allow them to test and treat drinking water contaminated with these “forever chemicals.” (AP Photo/Joshua A. The 3M chemical company announced Thursday, June, 22, 2023, a $10.3 billion settlement with U.S.

Environmental Protection Agency Center For Environmental Solutions and Emergency Response on Feb.

It's already about the age when the BFBVFS happens anyway, though perhaps my decrapifying it regularly has given my hood more longevity than usual.E va Stebel, water researcher, pours a water sample into a smaller glass container for experimentation as part of drinking water and PFAS research at the U.S. I have to think that this will even prevent any of those wonderful surprise-half-siblings-from-dallying-with-foreigners (we have all seen them by now) from having invalid skintones, but I am holding off on considering my hood completely free and clear for a couple more generations at least. I have not noticed any other problems since starting this practice.

Preventative medicine has been taking care to send any Sim I'm about to send into the wild (which I do a lot) back to CAS, and be certain that he/she has the default skintone. "Black" not in the sense of a normal skin color that happens to be dark, but in the sense of that disturbing blackish-silver color that seems to mean something like, "the doodad that points out which skin I should be wearing, is pointing at nothing." So far it has seemed that if I send the Sim in question back to CAS, and choose a skintone that actually exists for him/her, there are no further problems. I will notice this many Sim-days later when I see a completely black female Sim running around the neighborhood. Which is no problem unless, say, it's a skintone for males, and the sprog is female. What I've noticed is that if I send a playable Sim into the wild with a non-default skintone, any progeny are likely to have that skintone too. I read the thread and posts you mentioned, and though I can't say I understand all of it, the gist sounds plausible to me too, although the errors I've noticed were completely my fault and did not seem serious.
